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Chasing the snooker dream at the ‘worst tournament in the world’

Phil O’Kane is back for another crack at Q School (Picture: Instagram)

Snooker’s dreaded Q School is here again as players scrap it out to keep careers and dreams alive in the tensest of atmospheres.

128 players are on the main professional tour each season and eight of those will have come through UK Q School – two nail-biting tournaments held in Leicester.

Players who fell off the main tour last month are involved, as are faded stars of the past and ambitious players looking to turn pro for the first time.

The event has a gruesome reputation, described by those who have been there as ‘absolutely brutal,’ a ‘bloodbath’ and where you see ‘dead men walking’ among the snooker tables.

Few know about the rigours of Q School more than Phil O’Kane, who is competing for the 14th time this year and he agrees it is a grim place to be.

‘It’s just the atmosphere,’ O’Kane told Metro. ‘It goes so eerie when you go in there, no one’s talking. It’s the worst tournament in the world.

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‘You’ve got to learn how to deal with it. I can’t stand it, but you need to not dread it to try and play well. Instead of playing for your life, you’ve got to just try to enjoy playing snooker and not think about what’s at stake.

O’Kane first played Q School in 2011 (Picture: Instagram)

‘I’m saying this now, but when I’m 3-3 on Thursday night I’ll be shaking like a leaf and hating myself!’

33-year-old O’Kane is still bidding to graduate from Q School for the first time, having gone through spells of playing full-time and working away from the game as a lift engineer.

Focus has been fully on snooker for the last three of years and he intends to keep it that way until his goal is achieved.

‘I’ve given up so many times, thought life was better working, then just come crawling back,’ he said. ‘Now I’ve come to terms with it, I’m not going to give up no more. Eventually it’ll happen.’

Earnings away from the pro game are not plentiful, but O’Kane is backed bya support team that keeps the dream alive. Sponsors Coinpresso, BJM Construction and his club Spots and Stripes in Redhill keep O’Kane on the baize and away from fixing lifts.

‘Luckily I’ve got good people around me, so the earning side isn’t too bad,’ he said. ‘But it’s just keeping yourself motivated. The setbacks, the bad losses, all that side is so hard to take and you never really get taught how to deal with that when you’re younger.

‘When you go to a tournament only one person will leave happy. So every time you’re coming home sad and you learn so much about yourself in those times. It’s horrible, but as you get older you learn and I’ve learned that having good people around you is everything.’

It has been a long journey already for O’Kane, which started when his dad showed him a pool table in the local pub, which led to showing talent on the snooker table, before a rude awakening.

‘My first ever tournament was Star of the Future at Pontin’s, Prestatyn,’ he remembers. ‘It was three grand for the winner, plus sponsorship. I was such a big fish in a little pond in my own little social club. I was like, “I’ve won this.”

‘Went up there, I had Kyren Wilson, Jack Lisowski, Anthony McGill, Duane Jones, and Jak Jones in my group. I think I won one frame. Back to reality. My first ever big tournament, I just got a biggest slap in the face ever. Then the hard work starts, you get the bug for it.’

Kyren Wilson beat Jak Jones to win the 2024 World Snooker Championship final (Picture: Getty Images)

The Sidcup cueist admits it has been tricky watching contemporaries go on to big things in the game, players who he still competes with on the practice table.

‘The whole friendship group growing up, your mates you become close with, some of them are on the main tour and you think, “I was beating you back then, why can I not do that?”

‘I feel like jealousy is the wrong word for it, but you see one of your mates you beat in practice do really well and you think, “why can’t that be me?”

‘But that’s what keeps the dream alive and pumping. Like Jak Jones, he’s one of my best mates, he got to the World final two years ago. About a month before that, he was up practising with me and I think I lost 10-8 in a best-of-19. He could have been world champion! It’s nuts.’

O’Kane has also been playing Heyball in China (Picture: Instagram)

O’Kane will hope to show that practice form off in Q School this year, keen to put the painful experiences of the past to good use.

‘The thing that’s horrible about this tournament is the whole season relies on these two weeks,’ he said. ‘On one bad game, or even one bad shot.

‘I lost 4-3 to Mateusz Baranowski in the third to last round last year. I potted the blue to win 4-3 and went in-off. I walked away from that, honestly, I was devastated. He’s got on tour and done all right. How can one shot make his next two years and ruin mine?

‘A few years ago I lost to Elliot Slessor 4-3 in a close decider in the second to last round of the EBSA playoffs. There’s been so many near misses, which is another reason why you keep chasing because you know you’re there or thereabouts.’

O’Kane begins his 2026 Q School campaign on May 21 (Picture: Instagram)

The ambition to compete at the top of snooker remains, and while reality has maybe chiselled off the very biggest goals, O’Kane feels he has more than enough years ahead of him to do plenty in the game.

‘The first goal is getting on the main tour,’ he said. ‘I was one of the top top-ups a few years ago, so I played a lot of ranking events. I’ve been on TV, I’ve done that side.

‘When you’re a kid you want to become world champion and play on TV, whereas as you get older, it’s all about earning a living.

‘Now I just want to get on the main tour, give myself a proper crack at it. Then it’s about getting in the top 64 and climbing the rankings as high as possible.

‘I think it’s unrealistic to say now I want to be world champion because that’s every kid’s dream and there’s only a certain few that do it. It’s just one goal at a time. Get on the main tour, get in the 64 and then just see where it goes from there.

‘People around you don’t really understand, people are like, “why are you still chasing? What are you doing?”

‘You’ve got to tell yourself you’re still young enough in the game of snooker and you’ve got to trust your own ability. If you don’t do it, who else will?’

Q School Event 1 runs from May 21-26, with Event 2 from May 27-June 1, available to stream on WST’s YouTube.

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